SPECIAL REPORT ON THE U.S. ECONOMY
The $44 Trillion Abyss
The baby-boomers are about to retire, and it's going to cost us—big. Here's what the government doesn't want you to know.
By Anna Bernasek
Last fall Paul O'Neill, then Secretary of the Treasury, wanted a simple answer to a thorny question: How prepared was the nation today to pay all its future bills? Two government experts worked for months to calculate the answer. Their findings, which shocked even them, were never published—the Bush administration made sure of that. The reason for the silence was that by the time the two researchers had completed their study, O'Neill had been thrown out of the Treasury and replaced by the more politically astute John Snow. No savvy administration power player would dare point out, right in the middle of tax-cut season, that there was a huge hole in the country's finances—a $44 trillion hole.
That's the kind of Washington tactic that makes Larry Kotlikoff angry. So angry, in fact, that the normally composed and carefully spoken academic starts ranting about a government conspiracy to keep us all in the dark. He even refers to this particular episode as "the great Treasury cover-up." And once you start Kotlikoff on the subject, it's hard to stop him. "I hate politicians," he says, without pausing for breath. "These people are so... Continue
http://www.fortune.com/fortune/investing/articles/0,15114,538789,00.html---------------------------------------------------------------------
another review
White House Shelved 44 Trillion Deficit Report?
By Peronet Despeignes of the Financial Times
May 30, 2003, 10:21
Thursday 29 May 2003
Study commissioned by O’Neill sees $44 trillion in red ink
The Bush administration has shelved a report commissioned by the Treasury that shows the U.S. currently faces a future of chronic federal budget deficits totaling at least $44 trillion in current U.S. dollars.
The study, the most comprehensive assessment of how the U.S. government is at risk of being overwhelmed by the “baby boom” generation’s future healthcare and retirement costs, was commissioned by then-Treasury secretary Paul O’Neill.
But the Bush administration chose to keep the findings out of the annual budget report for fiscal year 2004, published in February, as the White House campaigned for a tax-cut package that critics claim will expand future deficits.
The study asserts that sharp tax increases, massive spending cuts or a painful mix of both are unavoidable if the U.S. is to meet benefit promises to future generations. It estimates that closing the gap would require the equivalent of an immediate and permanent 66 percent across-the-board income tax increase.
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http://www.chewinthefat.com/artman/publish/article_271.shtml---------------------------------------------------------------------
AND the actual Federal Reserve Report Documenting the $44 Trillion!
http://www.ngiweb.com/FiscalReport.pdf---------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a "ticking timebomb" that our government is avoiding. I listened to a one hour review of this issue today on the Financialsence.com saturday interview take a listen:
http://www.netcastdaily.com/fsnewshour.htm (the interview with Laurence Kotlikoff)